Here's how it works. Every time you purchase certain items at McDonald's over the next couple weeks — any one of 26 different menu items — you'll get to peel off a game piece comprised of two stamps.

These game stamps can correspond to either an instant prize, or they can correlate to a space on the Monopoly board. For spaces on the Monopoly board, if you get all the properties of a single color — or the Railroads — you win a prize.

So, let's take a look at your odds of winning prizes by buying McDonald's.

The Basics

Before we get into the stats, there are a few basic elements of the game you need to know.

First of all, nobody cares about the online sweepstakes games. This is the last we will mention it, ever, because it's boring. All we care about is the in-store game, where you peel game pieces and win.

There are approximately 602,490,060 game pieces in play.

This means that there are 1.2 billion game stamps, or individual attempts at victory.

There are 135,540,995 food prizes

There are 15,838,729 instant win prizes.

The odds of winning a prize at the in-store game are 1 in 4, or a 25% probability.

Here's what all that looks like:

View gallery

.

Walter Hickey/BI

Instant Prizes

If you win a prize on McDonald's Monopoly, it is probably going to be a food prize.

There's 1 in 4.45 odds — a 22.5% chance — you win a food prize when you get a McDonald's game piece.

As we mentioned earlier, the odds you win any prize is approximately 1 in 4, a probability of 25%.

So what does this mean? Well, comparing the two probabilities, 89.9% of the prizes will be food prizes. Hope you're hungry.

Small McCafe or Smoothie ($2.40) – Odds 1 in 44, or 2.3% chance you win.

McFlurry ($2.55) – Odds 1 in 44, or 2.3% chance you win.

Breakfast Sandwich ($2.65) — Odds 1 in 22, or 4.6% chance you win

Since there's a 25% chance of winning an instant prize, and a 22.5% chance of winning a food prize, that means that there is roughly a 2.5% chance of winning one of the other instant prizes.

These range from a red box DVD (1 in 101 chance) to a pair of headphones (similar probability of drawing the Ace of Spades from a shuffled deck of cards four consecutive times) to $100,000 (drawing the Ace of Spades five consecutive times).

For instance, most people think if McDonald's wants the Brown prize probability to be 1 in 1,000,000, they'll make the probability of drawing Baltic 1 in 1,000 and Mediterranean 1 in 1,000, making the probability of getting both 1 in 1,000,000.

Instead, McDonalds was much smarter about it. They make Baltic show up 1 in 10 times and Mediterranean show up 1 in 100,000 times.

This means that almost all the game pieces are entirely worthless, and only one game piece from every set is actually tantamount to winning the prize.

It's easy to get a hold of some of the worthless properties. They're outstandingly common, most with a 1 in 10 or so chance of popping up. Just hit Craigslist or something.

So here are the only game pieces that are actually very valuable. Don't trade these away:

RAILROADS: Short Line railroad, 1 in 150 million, wins a year's supply of gas.

So, if you find one of those pieces, you're actually special. If you find any other piece, it's basically worthless, unless you can find a guy with an actually valuable piece to sell it to.
Check out the full stats here »